Welcome
The BIDMC Multidisciplinary Clinical Informatics Fellowship Program is a 2 year ACGME accredited training program. For over 40 years, the training program has trained leaders who will transform healthcare through the creative use of information and communication technology. Through real-world exposure to and participation within one of the world preeminent clinical computing system environments, our fellows learn how to assess needs of clinicians and patients, refine clinical processes, and design and implement clinical systems. Each fellow is expected to complete a capstone project that demonstrates their mastery of Clinical Informatics.
Fellows are encouraged to obtain a Masters in Biomedical Informatics, offered through the Department of Biomedical Informatics at Harvard Medical School.
United States citizens and permanent residents can apply for stipend, tuition, and travel funds, typically for two- to three-year periods. These funded positions are supported by a training grant from the National Library of Medicine, NIH and are administered by the Harvard Medical School Department of Biomedical Informatics (DBMI). Fellows can also work clinically in their specialty in collaboration with one of our participating clinical departments.
For more information about the Boston-area Biomedical Informatics Research Training Program please visit the website here.
Latest News
- Thesis Defense for Informatics Fellows Set For 5/12/2016
- Fellow Team Wins Brigham Open.Epic Hackathon
- Supporting Decision Support - 2nd Year Fellow Dr. Mujeeb Basit Detects CDS Rule Failures
- Dr. McCray Promoted to Professor at HMS
- Dr. Safran Delivers Medical Grand Rounds on InfoSAGE - Healthware For Patients and Families
- Dr. Quintana Discusses mHealth at Google
DCI on Twitter
- Today we launch the African Cancer Stars program on Alicanto Cloud developed at DCI @BIDMC_Medicine to train the next generation of cancer researchers in Africa, supported by an NIH D43 grant led by Timothy Rebbeck. More at t.co/3q0bIICKor and t.co/Vp3OeBmaJd
- Jeslyn Rodriguez @JesRodriguez31 and DCI Chief @yuriquintana discuss how Social Determinants of Health and genetic factors influence COVID-19 incidence, mortality rates, and complications in the Journal of the National Medical Association t.co/CvkNfIA67O
- Can rapid antigen tests successfully detect new Covid variants? DCI Faculty member Dr. Ramy Arnaout @ArnaoutDataLab and colleagues publish their findings in JCM t.co/VJOWXdJJH0 Researchers say that antigen test performance needs to be reevaluated for emerging variants
- DCI Chief Yuri Quintana, Ph.D. honored to be among the first designated IEEE Computer Society Distinguished Contributors, as part of the IEEE Society’s 75th Anniversary recognizing technical expertise and volunteer commitment. t.co/2XeteuGQqn
- DCI Chief Quintana presents @theNCI Symp. on Global Cancer Research- "Accelerating Learning Health Systems using Alicanto Collaboration Platforms", @yuriquintana , @davidjeinstein ; Robin Joyce, Nuha Ali El Sayed , Carolyn Andrews Tim Rebbeck @Vi8tor t.co/nfmaBD2XtK